StopBlaming Whitey
Are YOU a victim?
Or are you part of the problem?
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09/06/2008: "Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are Terrorists!"
But why cant a white person say that and be taken seriously?
The following is the transcript of an interview between Tucker Carlson, MSNBC host, and Black Sportswriter Jason Whitlock. The interview was regarding the comments that radio show host Don Imus made over a year ago about a team of female basketball players, most of whom were black. He called them "nappy headed ho's" in addition to other comments that were deemed racist by blacks and white apologists. I was completely dumbfounded when I read the below transcript. Whitlock is saying what many whites have said, or wanted to say, but would be or have been called racist for doing so. Rarely have I heard a member of the black community chastising other blacks in such a full on flagrant way.
You can watch the video and read along. Cheers to Whitlock! If all blacks had the courage to speak out against such flawed so called leaders, they may just have a chance at redemption in society.
TUCKER CARLSON, MSNBC HOST: In the course of expressing his contrition on “The Today Show,” Don Imus asserted that his offensive language was, in fact, the product of African-American culture, not the creation of white America.
Few were impressed by that claim, but out next guest believes Imus was making an important point.
Joining me now is the columnist for “The Kansas City Star” Jason Whitlock.
Mr. Whitlock, thanks for coming on.
JASON WHITLOCK, COLUMNIST, “THE KANSAS CITY STAR”: Thanks for having me.
CARLSON: You have got a pretty tough column on this whole affair.
Let me just read you one paragraph from it"quote"“Thank you, Don Imus. You extended Black History Month to April, and we can once again wallow in victimhood, protest like it‘s 1965 and delude ourselves into believing that fixing your hatred is more necessary than eradicating our own self-hatred. The bigots win again.”
What do you mean the bigots win again?
WHITLOCK: I mean that people that don‘t want to see black people advance have won.
And it‘s because we keep deluding ourselves and getting caught up in distractions that have nothing at all to do with what is really setting back, holding black people back. And it‘s our own self-hatred.
Don Imus is irrelevant to what‘s going on with black people. Don Imus is no threat to us. Don Imus will not shoot one of us in the street. He will not impregnate our daughter or our sister and abandon that kid and that woman.
Don Imus is a bad shock jock who cracked a bad joke, apologized, offered a sincere apology. And two ministers who have needed forgive in their own life don‘t have the moral integrity to give this man the forgiveness that he has asked for in a sincere fashion.
I‘m repulsed by this whole thing. I‘m not a Don Imus fan. Don Imus has attacked me on his show. I‘m not a guy that"that has any love for Don Imus. But this is wrong. This whole thing has been handled horribly. For black people and for all of America, it has turned into a terribly divisive issue, when it didn‘t have to be.
CARLSON: Well, I"that‘s"that‘s a very brave point of you to make, particularly right now, when almost nobody is saying that out loud.
Back to something you said a second ago, the two ministers you referred to who desperately need forgiveness in their own lives. I assume you‘re talking about the Reverends Sharpton and Jackson.
Why are they"what is their role exactly in this? That has always kind of confused me. I"I like Al Sharpton personally. But where do he and Jesse Jackson come on this? Are they connected to this story, really?
WHITLOCK: They have"yes, they have driven the story.
CARLSON: I know, but...
WHITLOCK: Don Imus tried to apologize. Jesse Jackson, Sharpton got involved. Don Imus went on Sharpton‘s show, which, in retrospect, terrible mistake. He played right into Sharpton‘s wheelhouse.
But these guys have driven the issue. And"and I would say to CBS, don‘t negotiate with terrorists, because that‘s what Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton are. They go around the country lighting fires and dividing people, and then start picking everyone‘s pocket.
You never see them go back and apologize for the messes they make. Jesse Jackson today, right now, should be down at Duke, apologizing to those soccer (sic) players, rather than trying to turn these basketball players at Rutgers into the ultimate victims.
He owes the people down at Duke an apology for going and stirring in that mess, and dividing people and dividing this nation. They‘re terrorists. They go around this country starting fires. And they need to be stopped.
CARLSON: Well, why"by the way, Jesse Jackson pledged about a year ago that he was going to pay the college tuition of the accuser...
WHITLOCK: Yes.
CARLSON: ... Crystal Gail Mangum, in that case. I wonder if he still is.
Finally, though, I wonder, if Jackson is so bad, then why does he have so much power? And why do people listen to him? And why do they do his bidding? I‘m not sure I understand that.
WHITLOCK: Now, this one here, I will put on the media.
I believe that most, or a significant segment, of black America is tired of Jesse Jackson. We look at his track record of his accomplishments, and there‘s nothing there. There‘s nothing there. Other than Jesse and Al lining their pockets, they have done nothing.
If you compare Jesse and Al to Martin and Malcolm, and what those guys accomplished, it‘s an embarrassment. I don‘t understand how these black leader, how our black leaders, get these lifetime appointments, like they‘re Supreme Court justices.
We need to vote them out and bring in new leadership. It‘s not 1965. The problems aren‘t the same as they were in 1965. It‘s 2007. Black people have a new set of problems. And we need some new leadership and people with new solutions. These guys are trying to drag us back into the 1940s and ‘50s.
CARLSON: Well, I nominate you, Jason Whitlock, actually.
(LAUGHTER)
CARLSON: And I appreciate your coming on. Thank you very much.
